James Docherty Photography

James Docherty Photography

http://www.jald.co.uk/

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jald/


James Docherty 003

James Docherty 002

James Docherty 004

James Docherty 005

James Docherty 006

James Docherty 007

James Docherty 008

James Docherty 009

James Docherty 010

James Docherty 011

 

What kind of equipment (camera body, lens, filters, flash, tripod, cleaning equipment other) do you use?

I don’t have a great deal of equipment really. I use a Canon 5d mkII, 50mm f/1.8 lens, a 70-300mm lens, a remote for the camera, and a basic tripod that was given to me. I also have a Canon AE-1 and a old polaroid camera.

 

What do you like and dislike about your equipment, specially your camera, and how would you improve it?

I would improve my equipment by buying some new lenses and some lighting. I’ve always fancied a Canon 24-70 f/2.8. I like the Canon 5D mkII for its full frame and RAW capabilities, now that I understand and can utilise them more. Its great in low light conditions, it has superb image quality, and the video capabilities are great too (even though I don’t use them as much as I should).

 

What is your favourite lens, and why?

My 50mm 1.8 is my favourite. It’s a fantastic lens. It was cheap and produces wonderful images.

 

When you travel, what is in your essential photographic kit bag?

My 5D mkII, 50mm lens, 30-700mm lens, remote, tripod, AE-1 and film.

 

What kind of software/tools do you use for post-processing, if any?

I only ever really use Photoshop. I’ve dabbled with other software like Capture One but I’ve got all my shortcuts and actions set up with Photoshop, so I mainly go there to edit anything.

 

How long have you been taking photographs? How do you find inspiration?

I started photography when I was in high school. I did it for 2 years there, then went off to do it at 6th form college and later at university. I started shooting more seriously after I left uni though and found I learnt more from practising and shooting for myself.

I find inspiration everywhere and anywhere I can. Other photographers/ artists inspire me, such as Jeff Wall, Tim Walker, Jeremy Cowart, Sebastiao Salgado they make me strive to do better. I find it in Street art, people around me, the landscape, films, music. Music has always been the biggest source of inspiration for me. Picking out certain lyrics and letting my imagination run with them, the atmosphere music creates, the emotions it can evoke, that to affects the feel of a photo for me and provides a great source of inspiration.

 

Which style of photography do you like the most, and why?

I enjoy most aspects of photography and I can’t really pick a favourite as I will see something from another style that will make me choose that style and so on. I like photographs that evoke some sort of emotion from me, I love getting lost in landscape photography, I love the stories that can be told/ found from portraiture, I love seeing well executed surreal photographs that push your imagination.

 

What goal are you working towards within your photography and when will you know you have reached it?

I guess continuing to grow and develop is an ongoing goal, and one that I’ll never really reach because I’ll always be wanting to improve. I would like to finish my 365 project that I started ages ago, and even though by its definition I guess its technically failed, I still want to complete it for myself. I would also like to start building a solid career out of photography as well, but to also make sure I continue to shoot for personal work as well and not get lost in “jobs”.

 

Looking at your own work, which piece is your favourite? Why?

“A Poet in Need of an Empire” (http://www.flickr.com/photos/jald/5141118995/in/photostream) is probably my favourite piece I’ve taken. While I feel it’s one of my most successful photos to date, and it came out how I’d imagined and it captured the story I built around it in my head, it’s more my favourite for the simple, corny reason that it takes me back to a time and feeling when I was happy taking photos. I hadn’t taken any photos for a long time and this was my first proper outing to take some. When I look at it. It does take me back in a bit of a nostalgic way to my 365 time which is always nice. I like that this photo does that for me.

 

Does your work fit into any one or more distinct genres  (nature, landscape, long-exposure, black-and-white,  infra-red, urban, artistic, macro, vintage, vernacular, social, street)? If other, please specify.

I guess my main work to date would best fit in portraiture and fine art. If I use film it tends to be black and white and nature/ landscape.

 

Are there any photography websites that you visit regularly?

I usually visit social photography sites like Flickr, Society 6, 500px, Tumblr photo blogs, Behance.

 

What is the one most important lesson that you have learned since you started taking photographs?

Practise and be patient. I learnt more in terms of skill, composition, editing, about my camera, developing a style, everything when I was taking a photo and editing everyday. It made me develop and grow faster than I had before. You need to be patient with yourself and your craft and know that it will take time to get to where you want to be. That applies to developing yourself as a photographer and to every shoot you’re on.

 

And finally, what other interesting photographers would you like to see in this blog?

There are a tons of brilliant photographers around that I admire; Rob Woodcox, Sophie Ellis, Steven Sites, Matt Hill, Patrick Eggert, Sid Black, Whitney Justesen, Elizabeth Gadd, Alexis Mire, Suzy Wimbourne, Nick Counts, Alex Stoddard. All have their own unique style and more than deserve a feature.


Caecilia Metella Photography

Caecilia Metella Photography

http://www.flickr.com/photos/caecilia_metella/

https://www.facebook.com/caeciliametellaphotography?fref=ts

Caecilia Metella 001

Caecilia Metella 002

Caecilia Metella 003

Caecilia Metella 004

Caecilia Metella 005

Caecilia Metella 006

Caecilia Metella 007

Caecilia Metella 008

Caecilia Metella 009

Caecilia Metella 010

Caecilia Metella 011

Caecilia Metella 012

Caecilia Metella 013

Caecilia Metella 014

Caecilia Metella 015

 

 

What kind of equipment (camera body, lens, filters, flash, tripod, cleaning equipment other) do you use?

Ensign selfix (analogue), Lomo (analogue), Box brownie (analogue), Canon eos 60d (digital), tall tripod, small tripod, speedlite 430 ex II flash, Sigma polarising filters, Tamron 1:1 macro lens, Canon ef-s 17-85mm lens, Tamron sp af 70-200mm, Canon ef 17-40 mm l series lens.

 

What do you like and dislike about your equipment, specially your camera, and how would you improve it?

I am happy with everything, except that I would like it if Canon or Tamron did a L-series equivalent of the 17-85mm lens, as this is the range that I work in most.

 

What is your favourite lens, and why?

The tamron 1:1 macro lens. The optical quality is superb and it is a real precision instrument!

 

When you travel, what is in your essential kit bag?

Eos60d, small tripod, sigma filters, 17-85mm lens, 17-40mm lens.

 

What kind of software/tools do you use for post-processing, if any?

Photoshop.

 

How long have you been taking photographs? How do you find inspiration?

For about 10 years, first as an archaeological photographer and then as a fine art photographer. I find inspiration by simply looking for ordinary things in strange places and looking for strange things in ordinary places! The wealth of beautiful but unnoticed detail in the urban and industrial environment is a constant source of wonder to me.

 

Which style of photography do you like the most, and why?

Abstract. I like the loss of scale and lack of reference that comes with abstract work

 

What goal are you working towards within your photography and when will you know you have reached it?

I am striving to convey sense and emotion in my most recent work, using natural elements; I don’t know if I will reach this, but people are starting to respond to this work in the way that I had hoped! Whether I get there can only be decided by the viewer.

 

Looking at your own work, which piece is your favourite? Why?

My image of the monument to Mussolini at the foro italico. It is everything I like in an urban abstract – strong and simple in form and line, scale-less and reference-less, and striking to the eye.

 

Are there any photography websites that you visit regularly?

I visit so many! I visit this blog at least twice a week to see what’s new, and I also visit Zealous Co quite regularly. Flickr is a great source of inspiration to me also; some of my favourite photographers post a lot of work on there.

 

What is the one most important lesson that you have learned since you started taking photographs?

Don’t think that what looks like it could make a good photograph will automatically make a good photograph – and don’t dismiss the unlikely shots because they often turn out to be the best work!

 

And finally, what other interesting photographers would you like to see in this blog?

Tom McLaughlan (daruma* on flickr)
Andrea Vismara (andrea vismara on flickr)
Studio Murano (studiomurano on flickr)


Angie McMonigal Photography

Angie McMonigal Photography  

http://www.angiemcmonigal.com/

https://pinterest.com/ammcmonigal/

https://www.facebook.com/angiemcmonigalphotography

http://www.flickr.com/photos/angiemcmonigalphotography/

Angie McMonigal 007

Angie McMonigal 015

Angie McMonigal 014

Angie McMonigal 012

Angie McMonigal 011

Angie McMonigal 010

Angie McMonigal 008

Angie McMonigal 006

Angie McMonigal 005

Angie McMonigal 004

Angie McMonigal 003

Angie McMonigal 002

Angie McMonigal 001

 

 

What kind of equipment (camera body, lens, filters, flash, tripod, cleaning equipment other) do you use?

I shoot with a Nikon D700 and most often with my Nikkor 24-70mm f/2.8 lens. I also have the Nikkor macro 105mm f/2.8 and 50mm f/1.4 lenses. I tend to keep the equipment simple, I don’t use any filters, rarely use flash unless it’s for portrait work and then I use the SB800. I don’t often use a tripod but have a Manfrotto tripod and ballhead. I should probably spend a little more time researching and trying out new equipment but I generally like to keep things basic and simple. I would, however, love the Nikkor 14-24mm f2.8 lens!

 

What do you like and dislike about your equipment, specially your camera, and how would you improve it?

I’d say what I like least about my camera is the noisy shutter release and how heavy it is. But, overall, I love the quality of images and the good performance at higher ISO’s.

 

What is your favourite lens, and why?

My favourite lens is definitely the 24-70mm f/2.8. I’d say I use it for over 90% of my shots. As stated before I really do prefer travelling light in terms of equipment and this lens is extremely versatile and covers most shooting situations I find myself in. I primarily shoot architectural or urban landscape images and this lens covers what range of focal lengths I most often need.

 

When you travel, what is in your essential kit bag?

That really depends on the trip and whether I’m travelling with my kids. Certainly there’s the camera, 24-70mm lens, batteries, memory cards, chargers and if I plan to do night shooting of course my tripod is along. If I’m not travelling with my children I’ll typically rent a the 14-24mm lens and I do bring my 50mm f/1.4 lens as well. Again, I keep it pretty basic. And I always have my iPhone, sometimes it’s just fun to pull that out for some Instagram shots and you never know when you might need to locate a specific location.

 
What kind of software/tools do you use for post-processing, if any?

I use Lightroom 3 to organize and cull my images and do basic adjustments there…exposure, WB, contrast, clarity, noise reduction if necessary. Then I’ll process most images to some degree in CS6. I don’t do a huge amount of post-processing but I think cleaning them up and enhancing them with basic adjustments gives them a more polished presence.

 
How long have you been taking photographs? How do you find inspiration?

I got my first SLR in 2001 as a gift (my first DSLR in 2006) and have been shooting sporadically since then, but with more focus since late 2011. I got a little more serious about photography in 2004, taking a few classes at the Chicago Photography Center, but most of what I’ve learned has been self-taught through books, magazines, on-line searches and simply through trial and error. I spent a few years mainly shooting portraits and in late 2011 got back to shooting the fine art and architectural genre that made me fall in love with photography in the first place.

In terms of inspiration, there are so many places to get inspired. One of the most important is to expose yourself to different experiences…new music, visits to a museum or gallery, new destinations, and if that’s not possible just exploring a new area in my hometown gets me inspired. I also find so much inspiration in fellow photographers. People that are photographer friends here in Chicago that I can go out and shoot with and talk about all this photo stuff. Even those relationships that are developed through social media; Facebook, Google+, 500px and Twitter have been great. Not to mention the outstanding photos I see on all these sites, they help me see things in a different way.

 

Which style of photography do you like the most, and why?

 I most prefer architectural photography. I feel like I’m constantly trying to find a new way to view a building or piece of artwork and show it to viewers in a way that they may not have seen before. I find it fun to see the buildings and structures in new ways by isolating specific elements within the designs. Also, living in the profound architectural city of Chicago fuels my interest. I really am mesmerized by the soaring skyscraper’s throughout the city and the architects who had the vision to bring these masterpieces to fruition.

 

What goal are you working towards within your photography and when will you know you have reached it?

Just recently getting back to what I love shooting most, my main goal is to develop a clear style and subject matter with my shooting. I also want to work more on focusing on starting and completing specific series of work. This is something I’ve struggled with and only recently have found a clear(er) path toward this goal. I recently completed my From the ‘L’ series and am working on a new series A Thousand Points of Light. There will always be ongoing series that I feel aren’t ever really complete but maybe that will change with time and with me as I change. As far as knowing when I’ve reached my goal…I don’t know that I’ll ever feel it’s been reached, it’s always changing and evolving into something new.

 

Looking at your own work, which piece is your favourite? Why?

I’d have to say my favourite piece of my work is the black and white shot of the Calatrava sails of the Milwaukee Art Museum, http://500px.com/photo/7284637. This was the first shot I took that feels like it defines my style and the simplicity and strength I try to find in my subject matter. I also love black and white photography and love that there is very little gray in the image, I really do like the extremes in tones.

 

Are there any photography websites that you visit regularly?

I regularly visit Lenscratch, FeatureShoot, FlakPhoto and 500px.

 

What is the one most important lesson that you have learned since you started taking photographs?

To find what style of photography you’re most passionate about and put your efforts into perfecting your techniques and vision within that style. Also, you need to develop a thick skin, there is no shortage of criticism and rejection that comes with pursuing photography and putting it out there in the world. And to never give up.

 

And finally, what other interesting photographers would you like to see in this blog?

I really think Hengki Koentjoro’s work is outstanding. Vicki Reed’s photography is beautiful. Clarissa Bonet’s work is very compelling. And, Satoki Nagata’s street photography is excellent, I especially love his Lights in Chicago series.